!!! Overview
[{$pagename}] ([Tor]) is a [proxy] intended to enable online [anonymity][{$pagename}] [proxy] puts you on the [Tor] [Network].

[{$pagename}] [client] software routes Internet traffic through a worldwide volunteer network of servers in order to conceal a user's location or usage from someone conducting network surveillance or traffic analysis. 

Using [{$pagename}] makes it more difficult to trace [Internet] activity, including "visits to [Websites], online posts, instant messages and other communication forms", back to the user.

[{$pagename}] is intended to protect users' personal freedom, [privacy], and ability to conduct [confidential] business by keeping their [internet] activities from being monitored. To regulate dark web transactions, administrators set up a feedback system and a banning system. Similar to Amazon's feedback system, buyers can leave feedback for a vendor after completing a transaction. If there is consistent negative feedback or scamming, marketplace regulators have the ability to ban sellers. This is the effect of creating a quality control system that creates a strong disincentive for providing low quality of fraudulent products.[1]

"Onion routing" refers to the layered nature of the [encryption] service: The original [data] are [encrypted] and re-[encrypted] multiple times, then sent through successive [{$pagename}] relays, each one of which [decrypts] a "layer" of [encryption] before passing the data on to the next relay and ultimately the destination. This reduces the possibility of the original [data] being unscrambled or understood in transit[{$pagename}] [node] has their own [encryption] [key] and is negotiated with [X25519]([Curve25519]).

!! More Information
There might be more information for this subject on one of the following:
[{ReferringPagesPlugin before='*' after='\n' }]